Since last summer, proposals have flown around the Capitol to strip away all designated transportation funds for biking and walking—even though, across America, biking and walking account for 12 percent of all trips but receive only 1.6 percent of federal funding.

But on March 29 the U.S. House of Representatives—the hotbed of opposition to biking and walking as well as transit programs—voted to extend the current surface transportation bill for another three months, saving the funding of biking and pedestrian programs. The Senate followed two hours later. (This marks the ninth extension of the existing transportation bill since 2009 and another victory for the growing movement to ensure federal support for biking and walking projects.)

The political forces that want to steer policies back to the 1950s—when cars and highways were seen as the only way to go—have consistently failed to muster enough votes to shift federal transportation funding into reverse. There are several reason for this, but one of the most surprising is the emergence of bicycle advocates—and to a lesser extent pedestrian advocates—as a persuasive political lobby.

Even if you will never ride a bike in your life, you still see benefits from increased levels of biking... Good conditions for bicycling also create good conditions for
pedestrians. And what makes the streets safer for bikes, also makes them
safer for motorists.

The core of their message is plain common sense: All Americans are better off because biking and walking fosters improved public health (and savings in health care expenditures for households, businesses, and government), stronger communities, less congestion, safer streets, lower energy use, and a cleaner, safer environment.

While Congressional critics belittle bicyclists as a marginal, almost silly, special interest group, others herald them as self-reliant citizens who get around without the need of imported oil and mega-highway projects that cost taxpayers billions. Instead of a boondoggle, continued funding to improve biking and walking conditions in the United States represents a sound investment that saves taxpayers money now and in the future.

Even if you will never ride a bike in your life, you still see benefits from increased levels of biking. More bicyclists mean less congestion in the streets and less need for expensive road projects that divert government money from other important problems. Off-road paths, bike lanes, sidewalks and other biking and pedestrian improvements cost a fraction of what it takes to widen streets and highways. It's proven that bicycling and walking increase people's health and reduce obesity, which will translate into huge cost savings for government and a boost for our economy.

Policies that are good for bicyclists actually benefit everyone on the streets. Good conditions for bicycling also create good conditions for pedestrians. And what makes the streets safer for bikes, also makes them safer for motorists.

Higher gas prices (which have topped four bucks for the third time in four years) mean more Americans are looking for other ways to get around. Bikes offer people more choices in transportation. This is especially true for people whose communities are not well served by mass transportation or where distances are too long to walk to work or shopping.

"Trails are no longer viewed as community amenities; they’re viewed as essential infrastructure for business recruitment.”

Bike advocates are also working hard to dispel the stereotype that all bicyclists are young, white, urban, male ultra athletes in lycra racing jerseys. Increased investment in safer, more comfortable bike facilities means that more women, children, families, middle-aged and senior citizens, minorities, immigrants, low-income, suburban, and rural people will ride bikes.

The number of Americans who commute primarily by bike leaped 43 percent since 2000 according to census data. The number of overall bike trips rose 25 percent.

But for those numbers to keep climbing—and the benefits for all Americans to continue accumulating—people need to feel safer on their bikes. Seventy-one percent of all Americans report that they would like to bike more than they do now, according to U.S. Highway Safety Administration data. But many of them fear riding on busy streets with speeding traffic.

Sharing is the best way to help these people feel safer. By
historical tradition and legal decree, streets are not for the exclusive
use of moving and parked cars. They are shared space belonging to
everyone.

The Green Lane Project,
which will launch in May, is an initiative to reclaim a bit of streets
for bicyclists. The goal is to pioneer 21st century streets in six
cities where bike lanes on major routes will be protected from heavy
traffic by curbs, posts, parked cars or paint. This could do for
bicyclists what asphalt roads did for cars a century ago.

But it’s important to remember that biking and walking are not strictly an urban way to get around. A new report from the Rails to Trails Conservancy (which I helped write) shows that biking and walking in rural America is far more widespread than most people realize.

The report cites data from the U.S. Department of Transportation showing that rural Americans bike only slightly less than their urban counterparts, and much more than people living in newer suburbs. Here are two particularly surprising findings.

In towns of 10,000 to 50,000, a higher percentage of overall trips are made by bike than in urban centers.

In towns of 2,500-10,000 twice as many work trips are made by bike than in urban centers. Federal funding of biking and walking improvements play an important role in helping rural communities attract and retain young people, families, and businesses.

As the CEO of the Billings, Mont., Chamber of Commerce John Brewer told a Congressional hearing last year, “Talented people are moving to Billings in large part because of our trail system that creates the quality of life they are expecting. …Trails are no longer viewed as community amenities; they’re viewed as essential infrastructure for business recruitment.”

Interested?

The Dutch have spent 35 years perfecting the country's bicycling
infrastructure. We, too, can transform biking from a recreational
pastime to an integral part of our transportation system.

Interview with the co-founder of the City Repair Project, a Portland
group that helps neighbors turn public spaces into gathering places.

Jay Walljasper is a contributing editor to YES! Magazine. This article is adapted from remarks he gave at the National Bike Summit in Washington, D.C. on March 21 and previously appeared on Shareable.net.